Transcript Document

The Postwar Boom
Many Americans enjoy new material comforts and
new forms of entertainment during the post-war
economic boom. Yet racial gaps remain, and
millions continue to live in poverty.
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The Postwar Boom
SECTION 1
Postwar America
SECTION 2
The American Dream in the Fifties
SECTION 3
Popular Culture
SECTION 4
The Other America
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Section 1
Postwar America
The Truman and Eisenhower administrations lead
the nation to make social, economic, and political
adjustments following World War II.
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SECTION
1
Postwar America
Readjustment and Recovery
The Impact of the GI Bill
• 1944 GI Bill of Rights eases veterans’ return
to civilian life
• Pays partial tuition, unemployment benefits;
provides loans
Housing Crisis
• 10 million returning veterans face housing shortage
• Developers use assembly-line methods to massproduce houses
• Build suburbs—small residential communities
around cities
Continued . . .
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continued
Readjustment and Recovery
Redefining the Family
• Tensions from changed gender roles during war
increase divorce rate
Economic Readjustment
• Over 1 million defense workers laid off; wages
drop for many workers
• Price controls end; 25% increase in cost of
scarce consumer goods
• Congress reestablishes price, wage, rent controls
Remarkable Recovery
• People have savings, service pay, war bonds;
buy goods long missed
• Cold War keeps defense spending up; foreign aid
creates markets
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Meeting Economic Challenges
President Truman’s Inheritance
• Harry S. Truman can make difficult decisions,
take responsibility
Truman Faces Strikes
• 1946, higher prices, lower wages lead 4.5 million
to strike
• Truman seizes mines, threatens to take over
railroads
• Threatens to draft workers; unions give in
“Had Enough?”
• Republicans win Senate, House; ignore Truman’s
domestic policy
• Congress passes Taft-Hartley Act, overturns many
union rights
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Social Unrest Persists
Truman Supports Civil Rights
• African Americans, especially veterans, demand
rights as citizens
• Congress rejects civil rights laws; Truman
issues executive orders:
- integrates armed forces; ends discrimination in
government hiring
The 1948 Election
• Southern Democrats—Dixiecrats—protest civil
rights, form own party
• Truman calls special session; asks Congress for
social legislation
• Congress refuses; Truman goes on “whistlestop
campaign”
Continued . . .
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continued
Social Unrest Persists
Stunning Upset
• Truman defeats Thomas E. Dewey in close
political upset
• Democrats regain control of Congress, lose some
Southern states
The Fair Deal
• Truman’s Fair Deal is ambitious economic
program, includes:
- higher minimum wage, flood control projects,
low-income housing
• Congress passes parts of Fair Deal
Continued . . .
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Republicans Take the Middle Road
I Like Ike!
• Truman’s approval rating drops over Korean
War, McCarthyism
- decides not to run for reelection
• Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower runs against IL
governor Adlai Stevenson
• Newspapers accuse VP candidate Richard M.
Nixon of corruption
- defends self in televised “Checkers speech”
• Eisenhower wins; Republicans narrowly take
Congress
Continued . . .
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continued
Republicans Take the Middle Road
Walking the Middle of the Road
• Eisenhower conservative about money, liberal on
social issues
• Ike tries to avoid civil rights movement, which is
gaining strength
• On economy, works for balanced budget, tax cut
• Pushes social legislation, new Dept. of Health,
Education, Welfare
• Popularity soars; is reelected in 1956
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Section 2
The American Dream
in the Fifties
During the 1950s, the economy booms, and
many Americans enjoy material comfort.
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2
The American Dream in the Fifties
The Organization and the Organization Man
Employment in the U.S.
• By 1956, majority of Americans not in blue-collar
(industrial) jobs
• More in higher-paying, white-collar (office,
professional) positions
• Many in services, like sales, advertising,
insurance, communications
Conglomerates
• Conglomerates—corporation that owns
smaller, unrelated companies
• Diversify to protect from downturns in individual
industries
Continued . . .
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continued
The Organization and the Organization Man
Franchises
• Franchise—company offers similar products,
services in many places
- also the right to use company name and system
• Fast-food restaurants among first, most successful
franchises
Social Conformity
• Many employees with well-paid, secure jobs
lose individuality
• Personality tests see if job candidates fit in
company culture
• Companies reward teamwork, loyalty, encourage
conformity
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The Suburban Lifestyle
The Baby Boom
• 1950s, 85% of new homes built in suburbs
• 1945–1965 baby boom—soaring birth rate after
soldiers return
Advances in Medicine and Childcare
• New drugs fight, prevent childhood diseases
• Dr. Jonas Salk develops vaccine for poliomyelitis
• Pediatrician Dr. Benjamin Spock writes popular
guide for parents
• Baby boom impacts economy, educational system
Continued . . .
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continued
The Suburban Lifestyle
Women’s Roles
• Magazines, TV, movies glorify role of homemaker,
mother
• Over 1/5 of suburban wives dissatisfied with
their lives
• 1960, 40% mothers work; limited opportunities,
less pay than men
Leisure in the Fifties
• Shorter work week, paid vacation, labor-saving
devices free up time
• People have time for recreational activities,
spectator sports
• Book, magazine, comic book sales climb rapidly
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The Automobile Culture
Automania
• Cheap, plentiful gas, easy credit, advertising
increase car sales
• No public transit in suburbs; cars necessary
The Interstate Highway System
• Local, state roads link cities, suburbs to schools,
shops, work
• Interstate Highway Act—nationwide highway
network unites country
• Highways enable long-haul trucking, new towns,
family vacations
• Towns near highways prosper; those near older,
smaller roads decline
Continued . . .
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continued
The Automobile Culture
Mobility Takes Its Toll
• Auto boom stimulates new businesses—
e.g. drive-in movies
• Cars create social, environmental problems—
e.g. accidents, pollution
• Upper-, middle-class whites leave cities; jobs,
businesses follow
• Economic gulf widens between suburban and urban
- also widens gap between middle class and the poor
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Consumerism Unbound
New Products
• 60% of Americans in middle class; twice as many
as before WW II
• Consumerism (buying material goods) equated
with success
• Numerous new products appear on market in
response to demand
Planned Obsolescence
• Planned obsolescence—making products that
get outdated, wear out
- makes consumers buy or want to buy new ones
Continued . . .
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continued
Consumerism Unbound
Buy Now, Pay Later
• Credit purchases, credit cards, installments
extend payment period
• Private debt grows; consumers confident of future
prosperity
The Advertising Age
• Most people have satisfied basic needs; ads
encourage extra spending
• Psychological appeals in ads lure consumers to
particular products
• Ads appear in all media; television emerges as
powerful new tool
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Section 3
Popular Culture
Mainstream Americans, as well as the nation’s
subcultures, embrace new forms of entertainment
during the 1950s.
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Popular Culture
New Era of the Mass Media
The Rise of Television
• Mass media—means of communication that reach
large audiences
• TV first widely available 1948; in almost 90% of
homes in 1960
• Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
regulates communications
• By 1956, FCC allows 500 stations to broadcast
• Programs: comedies, news, dramas, variety shows,
children’s shows
• Lifestyle changes: TV Guide is popular magazine;
TV dinners
Continued . . .
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continued
New Era of the Mass Media
Stereotypes and Gunslingers
• Women, minorities on TV are stereotypes; few
blacks, Latinos
• Westerns glorify historical frontier conflicts
• Raise concerns about effect of violence on children
Radio and Movies
• Television cuts into radio, movie markets
• Radio turns to local news, weather, music,
community affairs
• Movies capitalize on size, color, sound
advantages; try gimmicks
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A Subculture Emerges
The Beat Movement
• Beat movement—writers, artists express social,
literary nonconformity
• Poets, writers use free, open form; read works
aloud in coffeehouses
• Beatnik attitudes, way of life attract media attention,
students
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African Americans and Rock ‘n’ Roll
Rock ‘n’ Roll
• Black musicians add electric instruments to
blues—rhythm and blues
• Rock ‘n’ roll—mix of rhythm and blues,
country, pop
• Has heavy rhythm, simple melodies, lyrics
about teenage concerns
• Music appeals to newly affluent teens who can
buy records
• Many adults concerned music will lead to
delinquency, immorality
Continued . . .
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continued
African Americans and Rock ‘n’ Roll
The Racial Gap
• African-American singers like Nat “King” Cole,
Lena Horne popular
• Many black artists play jazz, music characterized
by improvisation
• African-American shows mostly broadcast on
black radio stations
- content, advertising target black audiences
• Important to black audiences with fewer TV sets,
no presence on TV
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Section 4
The Other America
Amidst the prosperity of the 1950s, millions of
Americans live in poverty.
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4
The Other America
The Urban Poor
White Flight
• 1962, 25% of Americans below poverty level
• Post WW II–1960, 5 million blacks go from rural
South to urban North
• White flight results in loss of businesses, tax
payers to cities
• Cities can no longer afford to maintain or improve:
- schools, public transportation, police and fire
departments
Continued . . .
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The Urban Poor
The Inner Cities
• Poverty grows rapidly in decaying inner cities
• Poor economic conditions lead to illness and
terrible conditions
Urban Renewal
• Urban renewal—replace rundown buildings with
new low-income housing
• Housing and Urban Development Dept. created
to improve conditions
• Not enough housing built for displaced people
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Poverty Leads to Activism
Mexicans Seek Employment
• Many Southwest Mexicans become U.S. citizens
after Mexican War
• 1942–47, Mexican braceros, hired hands,
allowed into U.S. to work
• After war, many remain illegally; many others
enter to look for work
The Longoria Incident
• Undertaker refuses funeral services to Felix
Longoria, WW II veteran
• Outraged Mexican-American veterans organize
G.I. Forum
• Unity League of CA registers voters, promotes
responsive candidates
Continued . . .
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continued
Poverty Leads to Activism
Native Americans Continue their Struggle
• During Depression, U.S. policy of Native American
autonomy
• National Congress of American Indians: civil rights,
maintain customs
• U.S. stops family allotments, wages; outsiders take
tribal lands
The Termination Policy
• Termination policy cuts economic support, gives
land to individuals
• Bureau of Indian Affairs helps resettlement in cities
• Termination policy is a failure; abandoned in 1963
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